Good evening, fellow MGoBloggers, and I trust that you are recovering from the MGoBlackout.

So, the natural lead-in to tomorrow's National Championship Game apparently is the GoDaddy.com Bowl (by ESPN's figuring anyway), which shall begin in just a few moments. We have the 11-2 Kent State Golden Flashes taking on the 9-3 Arkansas State Red Wolves.

This will be, I believe, the first time Kent State has seen a bowl since 1972, and indeed, much as changed since the 1972 Tangerine Bowl, as they will undoubtedly note. Another note, of course, is that these are two teams whose head coaches have, in the interim, taken positions elsewhere.

The end of Denard Robinson's Michigan Football career leaves us to ask many important questions into what his time here meant, in so many different ways. We can ask wherre his stats rank among all time greats. We can ask if he will ever be equalled. We can ask about intangibles and what he meant to the program. But I intend to answer a much more lasting question. How hot is Denard Robinson?

Yes, everybody wants a piece of Denard, and who could blame them? But that's not good enough. Below, you will find a scientific inquiry into the actual heat of one Denard Robinson.

In order to answer this question, we must establish a few points. First, Mirriam-Webster defines a calorie as such:

a: the amount of heat required at a pressure of one atmosphere to raise the temperature of one gram of water one degree Celsius

It appeared as if Branden Dawson threw a sucker punch at Travis Carroll during the MSU/Purdue game, and the incident is under review by the B1G conference. Michigan State has released a statement saying they have reviewed the play, and they have concluded no punch was thrown ... case closed. But is it? You be the judge. It looks like a punch from the angle provided, but the video quality is poor.